Business Day

Bank in row with regulator over evidence

• Commission denies access to record of forex probe

- Moyagabo Maake Financial Services Writer maakem@bdfm.co.za

Standard Bank and the Competitio­n Commission were at loggerhead­s on Monday over the whereabout­s of the antitrust regulator’s forex investigat­ion record, with the bank arguing the commission was retaining the record for strategic reasons.

The commission hit back with claims that Standard Bank was trying to gain access to evidence before pleading to the charges against it.

The bank, one of 18 banking entities that was accused in February of rigging trade in the rand-dollar currency pair, has sought access to this record since March, according to arguments before the Competitio­n Tribunal on Monday.

The complaint has since been tied up in lengthy legal processes including exception applicatio­ns from 13 entities. Three entities — Absa, Barclays Capital and Barclays plc — have applied for leniency, while Citibank has settled and Standard Chartered is said to be in settlement talks.

“The exceptions have not been adjudicate­d upon, and Standard Bank is not obliged to plead in the circumstan­ces,” said Greta Engelbrech­t, counsel for Standard Bank.

Standard Bank said it had asked the commission to provide an index to the record, indicating which portions were restricted and the reasons for that, as well as to provide copies of the record by March 15 2017.

E-mail correspond­ence attached to Standard Bank’s applicatio­n to compel the commission to produce the records show the commission agreed to do so and responded to reminders from the bank’s lawyers with assurances that it was working on the record. But it had not produced the record by April, when the bank advised it would bring the applicatio­n to compel it to do so.

The commission failed to respond to the threat, and the applicatio­n was launched five days later.

“The commission initially sought to comply with the request but, on further considerat­ion, determined it was an impermissi­ble attempt by Standard Bank to gain access to evidence before pleading to the complaint against it,” said Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i, counsel for the regulator. “The commission then took the decision to deny Standard Bank’s request.”

But Engelbrech­t said the Competitio­n Appeal Court had previously ruled on a similar matter involving Group Five, where it found the regulator was a public body to whose records legislator­s had offered a general right of access. “The aspersions cast by the commission must be dismissed out of hand,” said Engelbrech­t.

Ngcukaitob­i said the commission had decided not to grant the records, so the matter before the tribunal was not about the bank’s rights of access.

“Is a party in the position of Standard Bank entitled to disregard a decision of the commission and go behind it?” Ngcukaitob­i asked.

“The answer … is not to be found in Group Five. Rather, it is to be found in principles of administra­tive law.”

Ngcukaitob­i argued that the bank accepted the commission had made a decision, and the only power the tribunal could exercise was that of review or appeal.

The tribunal reserved judgment on Monday.

THE ASPERSIONS CAST BY THE COMMISSION MUST BE DISMISSED OUT OF HAND

 ?? /Financial Mail ?? Bumpy road: Standard Bank and the Competitio­n Commission are in a legal battle over access to evidence pertaining to rigging trade in the rand-dollar currency pair.
/Financial Mail Bumpy road: Standard Bank and the Competitio­n Commission are in a legal battle over access to evidence pertaining to rigging trade in the rand-dollar currency pair.

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